In an earlier post I mentioned that one goal of the new introductory curriculum at Carnegie Mellon is to teach parallelism as the general case of computing, rather than an esoteric, specialized subject for advanced students. Many people are incredulous when I tell them this, because it immediately conjures in their mind the myriad complexities…
C. Reynolds. SIGGRAPH '87: Proceedings of the 14th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques, Seite 25--34. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (1987)
P. Damron, A. Fedorova, Y. Lev, V. Luchangco, M. Moir, und D. Nussbaum. ASPLOS-XII: Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Architectural support for programming languages and operating systems, Seite 336--346. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2006)
S. Marr, M. Haupt, und T. D'Hondt. Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Virtual Machines and Intermediate Languages, Seite 3:1--3:2. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (Oktober 2009)(extended abstract).
H. Schippers, T. Van Cutsem, S. Marr, M. Haupt, und R. Hirschfeld. Proceedings of the Fourth Workshop on the Implementation, Compilation, Optimization of Object-Oriented Languages, Programs and Systems (ICOOOLPS), Seite 4--9. ACM, (06.07.2009)
M. Miller, E. Tribble, und J. Shapiro. Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing, Volume 3705 von Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Seite 195--229. Springer, (April 2005)